29,961 research outputs found
Ground state solution of fractional Schr\"odinger equations with a general nonlinearity
In this paper, we study the following fractional Schr\"odinger equation:
\left\{\begin{gathered}
{(- \Delta)^s}u + mu = f(u){\text{in}}{\mathbb{R}^N}, \hfill
u \in {H^s}({\mathbb{R}^N}),{\text{}}u > 0{\text{on}}{\mathbb{R}^N}, \hfill
\\ \end{gathered} \right. where , , , is the fractional Laplacian. Using minimax arguments, we obtain a
positive ground state solution under general conditions on which we believe
to be almost optimal
Enhancing and suppressing radiation with some permeability-near-zero structures
Using some special properties of a permeability-near-zero material, the
radiation of a line current is greatly enhanced by choosing appropriately the
dimension of a dielectric domain in which the source lies and that of a
permeability-near-zero shell. The radiation of the source can also be
completely suppressed by adding appropriately another dielectric domain or an
arbitrary perfect electric conductor (PEC) inside the shell. Enhanced directive
radiation is also demonstrated by adding a PEC substrate.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
High-subwavelength-resolution imaging of multilayered structures consisting of alternating negative-permittivty and dielectric layers with flattened transmission curves
Multilayered structures consisting of alternating negative-permittivity and
dielectric layers are explored to obtain high-resolution imaging of
subwavelength objects. The peaks with the smallest |ky| (ky is the transverse
wave vector) on the transmission curves, which come from the guided modes of
the multilayered structures, can not be completely damped by material loss.
This makes the amplitudes of the evanescent waves around these peaks
inappropriate after transmitted through the imaging structures, and the imaging
quality is not good. To solve such a problem, the permittivity of the
dielectric layers is appropriately chosen to make these sharp peaks merge with
their neighboring peaks. Wide flat upheavals are then generated on the
transmission curves so that evanescent waves in a large range are transmitted
through the structures with appropriate amplitudes. In addition, it is found
that the sharp peaks with the smallest |ky| can be eliminated by adding
appropriate coating layers and wide flat upheavals can also be obtained.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figure
Standing waves for a class of Schr\"odinger-Poisson equations in involving critical Sobolev exponents
We are concerned with the following Schr\"odinger-Poisson equation with
critical nonlinearity: \left\{\begin{gathered}
- {\varepsilon ^2}\Delta u + V(x)u + \psi u = \lambda |u{|^{p - 2}}u +
|u{|^4}u{\text{in}}{\mathbb{R}^3}, \hfill
- {\varepsilon ^2}\Delta \psi = {u^2}{\text{in}}{\mathbb{R}^3},{\text{}}u >
0,{\text{}}u \in {H^1}({\mathbb{R}^3}), \hfill \end{gathered} \right. where
is a small positive parameter, , .
Under certain assumptions on the potential , we construct a family of
positive solutions which
concentrates around a local minimum of as .Comment: 40 page
Large Margin Softmax Loss for Speaker Verification
In neural network based speaker verification, speaker embedding is expected
to be discriminative between speakers while the intra-speaker distance should
remain small. A variety of loss functions have been proposed to achieve this
goal. In this paper, we investigate the large margin softmax loss with
different configurations in speaker verification. Ring loss and minimum
hyperspherical energy criterion are introduced to further improve the
performance. Results on VoxCeleb show that our best system outperforms the
baseline approach by 15\% in EER, and by 13\%, 33\% in minDCF08 and minDCF10,
respectively.Comment: submitted to Interspeech 2019. The code and models have been release
Quantum Renormalization Groups Based on Natural Orbitals
We propose a new concept upon the renormalization group (RG) procedure for an
interacting many-electron correlated system in the framework of natural
orbitals, and formulate an algorithm for this RG approach. To demonstrate its
effectiveness, we apply this new approach on a quantum cluster-impurity model
with four impurities in comparison with the exact diagonalization method. We
also find a shortcut to dramatically improving this RG algorithm. Further
discussion is presented with the cluster dynamical mean-field theory and
multi-impurity/orbital Kondo problems.Comment: 4.5 pages, 4 figures, and 1 table; 3 pages Supl. with another 2
figures and 4 tables; In this version, we update the Supl. with more
discussions and comparisons with DMR
Rational and semi-rational solutions of the nonlocal Davey-Stewartson equations
In this paper, the partially party-time () symmetric nonlocal
Davey-Stewartson (DS) equations with respect to is called -nonlocal DS
equations, while a fully symmetric nonlocal DSII equation is called
nonlocal DSII equation. Three kinds of solutions, namely breather, rational and
semi-rational solutions for these nonlocal DS equations are derived by
employing the bilinear method. For the -nonlocal DS equations, the usual
()-dimensional breathers are periodic in direction and localized in
direction. Nonsingular rational solutions are lumps, and semi-rational
solutions are composed of lumps, breathers and periodic line waves. For the
nonlocal DSII equation, line breathers are periodic in both and
directions with parallels in profile, but localized in time. Nonsingular
rational solutions are ()-dimensional line rogue waves, which arise from a
constant background and disappear into the same constant background, and this
process only lasts for a short period of time. Semi-rational solutions describe
interactions of line rogue waves and periodic line waves.Comment: 23pages, 12 figures.This is the accepted version by Studies in
Applied Mathematic
Interaction-Induced Characteristic Length in Strongly Many-Body Localized Systems
We propose a numerical method for explicitly constructing a complete set of
local integrals of motion (LIOM) and definitely show the existence of LIOM for
strongly many-body localized systems. The method combines exact diagonalization
and nonlinear minimization, and gradually deforms the LIOM for the
noninteracting case to those for the interacting case. By using this method we
find that for strongly disordered and weakly interacting systems, there are two
characteristic lengths in the LIOM. The first one is governed by disorder and
is of Anderson-localization nature. The second one is induced by interaction
but shows a discontinuity at zero interaction, showing a nonperturbative
nature. We prove that the entanglement and correlation in any eigenstate extend
not longer than twice the second length and thus the eigenstates of the system
are `quasi-product states' with such a localization length.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; algorithm improve
The rational solutions of the mixed nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation
The mixed nonlinear Schr\"odinger (MNLS) equation is a model for the
propagation of the Alfv\'en wave in plasmas and the ultrashort light pulse in
optical fibers with two nonlinear effects of self-steepening and self
phase-modulation(SPM), which is also the first non-trivial flow of the
integrable Wadati-Konno-Ichikawa(WKI) system. The determinant representation
of a n-fold Darboux transformation(DT) for the MNLS equation is
presented. The smoothness of the solution generated by is
proved for the two cases ( non-degeneration and double-degeneration ) through
the iteration and determinant representation. Starting from a periodic
seed(plane wave), rational solutions with two parameters and of the
MNLS equation are constructed by the DT and the Taylor expansion. Two
parameters denote the contributions of two nonlinear effects in solutions. We
show an unusual result: for a given value of , the increasing value of
can damage gradually the localization of the rational solution, by analytical
forms and figures. A novel two-peak rational solution with variable height and
a non-vanishing boundary is also obtained.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure
Inverse Transformation Optics and Reflection Analysis for Two-Dimensional Finite Embedded Coordinate Transformation
Inverse transformation optics is introduced, and used to calculate the
reflection at the boundary of a transformation medium under consideration. The
transformation medium for a practical device is obtained from a two-dimensional
(2D) finite embedded coordinate transformation (FECT) which is discontinuous at
the boundary. For an electromagnetic excitation of particular polarization,
many pairs of original medium (in a virtual space V') and inverse
transformation can give exactly the same anisotropic medium through the
conventional procedure of transformation optics. Non-uniqueness of these pairs
is then exploited for the analysis and calculation of the boundary reflection.
The reflection at the boundary of the anisotropic FECT medium (associated with
the corresponding vacuum virtual space V) is converted to the simple reflection
between two isotropic media in virtual space V' by a selected inverse
transformation continuous at the boundary. A reflectionless condition for the
boundary of the FECT medium is found as a special case. The theory is verified
numerically with the finite element method.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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